It seems to use the play integrity API when communicating with Insulet's servers which provide a private key to the PDM/app once it was registered with the user's account. However since the Pod doesn't have access to the internet, it has no way to check the play integrity signature AFAIK, so instead it checks that the certificate that the PDM/app presents to it is issued from the cert chain that it trusts.
In the US, it would be unthinkable for a hospital to send patient data to something like ChatGPT or any other public services.
Might be possible with some certain specific regions/environments of Azure tho, because iirc they have a few that support government confidentiality type of stuff, and some that tout HIPAA compliance as well. Not sure about details of those though.
Complete opposite of Finland where everything from schools meeting/document systems(office/teams) to healthcare data silos(azure datalakes) is on Microsoft
yes, came across xdrip+ when looking for an android app I could use for Libre 2. I don't think Dexcoms are sold in Kenya, and even the Libres around are UK ones so you need 1) a VPN to setup, 2) an iphone. Both things being a challenge for most - I had to buy a my first ever iphone for this. Anyway, found xdrip a bit of a challenge to setup and a bit too technical to suggest to others; needs sideload and manually disabling a lot of Android defaults.
I had a lot of success with Juggluco[1] which is available on the Play Store and provides easy to use APIs to interact with supported CGM readings. Juggluco has an inbuilt xdrip web server but I haven't tried it yet.
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